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Tastes of Paradise:
A social history of spices,
stimulants and intoxicants
by Wolfgang
Schivelbusch
(1992) Translated from German
by David Jacobson
New York: Pantheon Books
A review by David Denborough
Tastes of Paradise explores various histories of spices, stimulants and
intoxicants in western culture by asking the following questions:
• In what ways have these substances affected human history?
• What meanings have been attributed to the use of 'articles of pleasure' in
particular cultures, at particular times?
• And how have changes in attitudes to particular substances been linked
to broader cultural changes?
In asking these sorts of questions, Wolfgang Schivelbusch invites us into
further explorations - explorations into the ways in which people's
relationships to what we now call drugs and 'addiction' are influenced by
historical forces. Our work with issues of drugs, drug-related problems and
'addiction' does not take place in a social and historical vacuum. By exploring
the broader social and political context of the use of spices, stimulants and
intoxicants, how might our understandings and therefore our
ways of working be affected?
Our kitchen tables
Tastes of Paradise begins with Schivelbusch tracing the history of the
salt and pepper that stand seemingly benignly on our kitchen tables. I was
unaware that the Latin words 'salus', meaning well-being, and 'salubrita',
meaning health, both derive from the word 'sal', meaning salt. Over centuries
salt has apparently been used as medication, as well as to preserve and flavour.
Various phrases that remain within our daily language reflect how highly salt
has been valued at times, including 'the salt of the earth' and 'the salt of
life'. The history that Schivelbusch traces of our relationship with salt is in
many ways honourable.
On the other hand, he describes how pepper has been closely associated with
the colonisation of large tracts of the globe:
The great voyages of exploration, discovery of the 'New World', the
beginnings of the modern age, were all closely linked to European hunger for
pepper. This hunger became a driving force in history the moment obstacles arose
to interfere with its satisfaction, (p. 12)
The European demand for pepper necessitated the search for a sea route to
India and in turn brought Europeans to what they called the 'New World'. The
Spanish, for example, were looking for India and spices when they found the
continent of America and gold.
Schivelbusch documents the ways hi which desires for spices, stimulants and
intoxicants have changed the course of history time and again. Exploring these
stories somehow changes our present. My kitchen table looks in some way
different for the knowledge that the pepper and salt that stand together, and
our desires for them, have disparate and powerfully influential histories.
Alcohol
Schivelbusch then turns his attention to the crucial practical and symbolic
roles that alcohol played in pre-industrial Europe. It came as a surprise to me
that, prior to the introduction of the potato, beer was second only to bread
as the main source of nourishment for most central and north Europeans
(p.22), and that breakfast in 17th century Europe routinely consisted of beer
soup. Heavy drinking was apparently an accepted part of life.
Many of the social and ritual functions of alcohol in pre-industrial Europe
still resonate today. Rituals including drinking to someone's health, clinking
glasses, the obligation to return another's toast, drinking as a pledge of
friendship and drinking contests are described by Schivelbusch as rites and
obligations one cannot easily evade (p.23). Through these rituals alcohol
has played and continues to play an important part in social relations.
Schivelbusch describes the ways in which for the working classes the local pub
has often been a hub of communication, and political and social life. The
collectivity of shouts, toasts and rounds have consistently, according to
Schivelbusch, stimulated the proletarian virtues of collectivity and
solidarity (p. 166). These rituals have significant meaning in terms of the
construction of lives, relationships and communities. When attempts began to be
made to bring about changes to these rituals they were also attempts to make
changes to the ways in which lives and relationships were structured.
The birth of Puritanism
When the Reformation tried to redefine the relationship between the
individual and God, it also sought to regulate the relationship between
individuals and alcohol. Schivelbusch argues that these attempts were laying
an essential foundation in both realms for the development of capitalism
(p.34). It was the Protestant work ethic that sought initially to alter
relationships with alcohol. From that time on, attempts to work on issues of
alcohol and other drug-related problems have often been influenced by the moral
prescriptions of Puritanism. What do these histories mean for those of us
wanting to find collaborative ways of working on such problems today?
According to Schivelbusch the social drinking habits and relationships of
pre-industrial Europe were very strong and it therefore took more than Puritan
ideology to condemn Demon Alcohol (p.34). Attempts to prohibit toasting
rituals repeatedly failed to achieve desired results. The way Schivelbusch
describes it, alcohol consumption only dropped when broader changes occurred in
the society - changes that came:
with a more highly developed society and economy... a higher degree of work
discipline - and also a new group of beverages that could replace the old ones.
For without substitute the existing traditions would not disappear... These
requirements were fulfilled by the new hot beverages that reached Europe in the
17th Century - above all, coffee, (p.34)
Coffee
Coffee functioned as a historically significant drug. It spread
through the body and achieved chemically and pharmacologically what rationalism
and the Protestant ethic sought to fulfill spiritually and ideologically. With
coffee, the principle of rationality entered human psychology, transforming it
to conform with its own requirements. The result was a body which functioned in
accord with the new demands - a rationalistic, middle-class, forward-looking
body, (p.39)
Schivelbusch writes of the social meanings that are to be found in the rise
in popularity of coffee as the drug of choice in 17th century. With the rise of
Puritanism, coffee began to be seen as awakening a drowsy humanity from its
alcoholic stupor to middle-class commonsense and industry (p.34).
Schivelbusch describes the ways in which the effects of caffeine, including the
ways in which it enhances mental activity and speeds perception and judgement,
make coffee the beverage of the modern bourgeois age (p.34).
Coffee promised to lengthen and intensify the time available for work and
what's more it was seen as anti-erotic. It replaced sexual arousal with
stimulation of the intellect (p.37). This combination, according to
Schivelbusch, made coffee the ideal Puritan drink: Coffee as the beverage of
sobriety and coffee as the means of curbing the sexual urges, it is not hard to
recognise the ideological forces behind this reorientation (p.37). There
developed a moral imperative, in the minds of some, to drink coffee rather than
alcohol.
Schivelbusch also briefly touches upon how coffee houses became centres for
communication, and how these centres were often exclusively male. He describes
how the increasing use of coffee and the exclusion of women was protested: In
1764 a broadside caused a great sensation in London. Its title: 'The Women's
Petition Against Coffee.' ...The text expressed in no uncertain terms the fear
that coffee would make 'men [as] unfruitful as those deserts whence that
unhappy berry is said to be brought'. It is easy to identify the sociopolitical
impulse behind this complaint: the English coffeehouses of this period excluded
women, and in their pamphlet the women were rebelling against the increasing
patriarchalisation of society. That this opposition should use the argument that
coffee makes men impotent shows, on the one hand how powerful this notion was at
the time, and on the other, how unpuritannical, indeed how anti-puritannical,
the women of this time were, (p.37)
Smoking
Attention is also given to the social histories of smoking: If coffee
makes a person wakeful, mentally alert, and at worst, nervous, the effect of
tobacco was described from the very first by reference to calm, placidity,
contemplation, concentration, etc. (p. 107). Schivelbusch sees tobacco as
having complementary properties to those of coffee and that the two substances
work in tandem. Where coffee stimulates, tobacco calms. Interestingly, he then
traces some of the connections between smoking and struggles for equity and
justice.
The use of tobacco, like coffee, reflected the patriarchal nature of society
and ironically fighting for the right to smoke acquired symbolic significance
for the emancipation movement of women hi the 19th century: Around the turn
of the 20th Century, when the cigarette came into its own, the relation of women
to smoking underwent an about face. In the 19th Century the woman smoker had
been an object of caricature, while on the other hand the women's emancipation
movement used smoking as a demonstrative symbol; now the cigarette appeared as a
distinctly feminine prop. (p. 126)
Schivelbusch also writes of the ways in which smoking was linked to
worker's rights and democracy movements in Germany. The first and most radical
union in Germany was apparently formed by the cigar rollers - a fact which also
brings with it a sense of irony ...it was a curious twist in its symbolic
history that the cigar should later have come to be a status symbol for
capitalist entrepreneurs (p. 129).
Epidemics of the spirit
Schivelbusch describes how thesuccess of coffee, and later tea and
chocolate, shifted drinking mores and deprived alcohol of the status it had once
enjoyed as the universal drink, and how smoking added an entirely new practice
to the use of spices, stimulants and intoxicants. The rise of Puritan values in
Victorian England was also entwined in the changing meanings of alcohol use.
Schivelbusch describes how stopping in at a pub, in the eyes of the bourgeoisie,
became almost as scandalous as visiting a brothel (p. 148).
These attitudes and the new- found sobriety, however, were
apparently limited to specific sectors . of the population, specifically the
middle-class. Things were different for the working classes as they'd never had
a share in the coffee culture of the 17th and 18th centuries. Industrialisation
brought an intensification of social misery into workers' lives (p. 149),
according to Schivelbusch, and drinking took on new meanings. As Engels
described, the worker... must have something that compensates for his toil
and makes the prospect of the next day tolerable (p. 149).
Towards the middle of the 18th century the distribution and
consumption of liquor soared. Schivelbusch sees the move towards the drinking of
spirits as reflective of an -industrialisation of drinking' in which liquor
represents the acceleration of intoxication, intrinsically related to other
processes of acceleration of the modern age (p. 153). People were now
getting drunk in one tenth of the time and with one tenth of the volume of
alcohol beverage. This brought with it devastating consequences not only to
people's health and lives but also to the social relations arranged around
drinking:
The industrialisation of drinking at first had as
devastating an effect on the traditional lifestyle as industrialisation had on
the craft of weaving. In fact, liquor and the mechanical loom worked hand in
hand, as it were, in 18th Century England, to destroy traditional ways of life
and labor. (p.153)
Gin in particular brought with it a new form of drunkenness:
Gin struck the typically beer- drinking English populace
like a thunderbolt. Its social destructiveness was comparable to the effect
whisky later had upon the North American Indian cultures. The traditional
drinking patters could not cope with this highly concentrated inebriant.
Drinking and intoxication totally lost their characteristic role of establishing
social bonds or connections. Alcoholic inebriation gave way to alcoholic stupor.
(p. 156)
The gin epidemic was a social catastrophe of enormous
proportions that reflected another social catastrophe: What was
euphemistically termed 'rural exodus,' the 'flightfrom the countryside,' and in
reality meant the expulsion of whole village populations from their indigenous
soil through the so-called enclosures (another euphemism for expropriation by
large landowners) formed the background, or rather the breeding ground, for the
gin epidemic ... The result was utter disorientation. Gin held out the promise
to working-class people to help them forget their unbearable situation at least
momentarily. It provided alcoholic stupefaction, not social intoxication. So
began solitary drinking, a form of drinkinglimited to industrialised Europe and
America. In every other age and civilisation drinking had been
collective, (pp. 15 8-9)
The connection between dispossession of land, the introduction of liquor and
the gin epidemics of Europe seems to resonate powerfully with what European
people have brought upon the Indigenous peoples of this country. For me as an
Anglo- Australian, reading these histories of the gin epidemics and reading the
histories of what European people have done to their own people in relation to
dispossession of land and alcohol seems to place our practices of colonisation
in a different perspective. At this time as non- Indigenous Australia is
grappling with issues of reconciliation with Indigenous Australia, these stories
provoke questions. How might we address our own histories in relation to alcohol
in ways that would play a part in processes of reconciliation? How can we take
seriously the histories of our culture in relation to alcohol and its effects
upon our own people as well as upon others? How could this create the
possibility for the building of partnerships and ways of working that place
problems of alcohol within the broader political and social context?
Schivelbusch also explores to some extent the relationship between alcohol
use and social change movements. He quotes Engels in describing how serious
and highly successful rebellions took place only in wine regions or in those
German states that had more or less protected themselves from brandy through
various tariffs (p. 165). In this way parallels are drawn between overcoming
drug-related problems and challenging social injustice - parallels that seem
particularly
pertinent today.
Narcotics
The place of narcotics such as opium, hashish, marijuana, cocaine, heroin,
and morphine in western culture is another area explored by Schivelbusch. He
describes the origins of the taboo on narcotics and documents the ways in which
the historically recent moves to make narcotics illegal have been interwoven
with wars, colonialism and racism.
Apparently, until the end of the 19th century the attitude to narcotics was
relaxed. At the beginning of the 19th century opium was commonly available in
Europe as a pain-killer and sedative. It played a similar part to aspirin today
and was as freely available. It was given to children in juices and syrups to
lull them to sleep - so much so that prominent opium addicts of the century
often traced the start of their addiction to being dosed with opiates in
childhood (p.206).
According to Schivelbusch, not only did opium have an assured place in the
middle-class medicine chest, it was also an integral part of the lives of the
working-class. In Europe in the first half of 19th century there was casual,
easy access to cheap opium. At the same time the artistic and literary
avant-garde consumed opium extensively as well as hashish. It was these poets
and writers who made society aware of the effects of these drugs. Their writings
brought narcotics to the attention of the bourgeois to the extent that
bourgeois anxiety fantasies were the mirror images of the poets' dreams
(p.214).
Wars for drugs
Perhaps the greatest effects of opium, however, occurred away from Europe in
Asia. There Britain, through the East India Company, took part in an opium trade
that yielded huge profits and had profound effects on Chinese society and the
course of recent history. Britain traded opium for tea, which had joined coffee
as the drink of choice in Europe. In the process, opium infiltrated Chinese
society as Schivelbusch describes in some detail:
During the 18th Century... the Chinese empire grew proportionately weaker
as the European powers, above all England, became more and more aggressive.
Trade between equal partners was transformed into a trade dictatorship by the
East India Company, which enforced its will by means of its own militia. Instead
of continuing to pay for Chinese products in cash, the company now offered a
special trade item, opium. It was a cheap commodity for the company, produced on
a large scale on its plantations in India... In less than a century, Chinese
opium consumption increased seventyfold. Obviously such an increase brought
far-reaching social consequences. The comparison with the English gin epidemic
immediately springs to mind... The spread of opium through Chinese society cut
across all classes of the population, from very low to very high... The Chinese
government tried repeatedly to resist the compulsory trade by prohibiting opium
smoking - but to no avail. (p.219)
In 1839 the Chinese, worried both by the economics of the situation and the
growing indigenous addiction to opium, confiscated a quantity of British opium
at Canton. The British government maintained that Chinese courts had no
jurisdiction over British subjects and could not authorise the seizure of their
property. War was declared and the British navy bombarded Canton, crushed China
by military force, legalised opium, and forced China, through the Treaty of
Nanking in 1842, to open its markets to the western world's opium. As a result
of this opium war Britain claimed Hong Kong as a colony.1 Opium
flowed freely into China once again to such an extent that in 1911 opium
composed just under half of China's total imports - a drug consumption of
staggering proportions.
Throughout the opium trade the British had deliberately and systematically
tried to ensure that opium use increased only outside their homeland. These
attempts had been largely successful until a number of developments brought
great changes to the drug scene. In 1817 morphine was produced for the first
time from opium, and in 1874 this was followed by the production of heroin.
Schivelbusch draws parallels between the effects of these new drugs and the
effects that the spread of hard liquor had caused to the drinking world.
Morphine and heroin brought with them an escalation of toxicity with
considerable consequences for society2 (p.214). But it was once
again war that multiplied the incidence of drug addiction. Morphine was used in
massive quantities in the wars of the 19th century - the Crimean War and the US
Civil War - and then in the First World War, and inevitably made its way from
military to civilian use. In this way it seems the problem of narcotics 'came
home' to Europe and North America.
Drug laws
During the British - and to a lesser but significant extent North American -
trade in opium with the Chinese there existed, according to Schivelbusch, a
scapegoating of the Chinese as an 'opium ridden' people. So much so that the
origins of drug laws seem to have racist histories. The earliest modern drug
regulations seem to be anti-opium ordinances in San Francisco (1875) and
Virginia City, Nevada (1876), which were inspired not by medical considerations
but by xenophobia directed at Chinese immigrants.
The other major influence for drug laws, according to Schivelbusch, came
through attempts to curb the western powers' trade in opium:
The decisive impetus for modern drug legislation eventually came from
outside Europe. It was the fateful role opium had played in China... The
anti-opium campaign culminated in a series of international treaties negotiated
shortly before and after WWI with the goal of curbing the international opium
trade. Only in the wake of these agreements did the individual countries
promulgate national drug laws, which in essence remain in effect to the present
day. (pp.214-5)
To know of the historical racist and imperialist links in relation to
drug laws and ordinances sheds for me a different light on current sentencing
and policing disparities. In North America, for example, 'crack cocaine' and
'powdered cocaine' carry vastly different penalties when in reality the only
major difference between the two is the class and cultural background of the
user. In Australia the policing of 'drunk and disorderly' charges and other
street offences associated with public alcohol use continues to lead to the
over-representation of Indigenous Australians in custody. Both situations, it
seems, build upon long histories of discrimination.
The war on drugs
Perhaps knowing more about the intricate historical connections of
imperialism and the drug trade, and between drug laws and racist discrimination,
could shed some light on the latest war about drugs - the one that is being
billed as the 'war on drugs'. Schivelbusch does not explore in any detail the
politics of the contemporary 'war on drugs' in North America or the tendency to
'get tough' on drug-related crime here in Australia and in parts of Europe. This
seems unfortunate as there seem to be so many more questions to ask. Given the
histories of the links between colonisation, the trade in drugs and drug laws, I
would be interested in knowing more about the ways in which the current 'war on
drugs' waged largely against the black and the poor, is linked to issues of
contemporary colonisation. And what does it mean, I wonder, for those people
struggling to change their relationship with drugs to know that the metaphors
associated with the substances they are taking into their bodies are now war
metaphors?
New stories from old
All these sorts of questions flow from the type of exploration
started by Wolfgang Schivelbusch in Tastes of Paradise. Explorations like
those made by Schivelbusch invite us to reconsider our current relationships
with spices, stimulants and intoxicants. Perhaps exploring the meanings of these
substances within history and within our culture will provide possibilities for
the weaving of new stories, new meanings, and with them new ways of working.
Notes
1. Only a few weeks ago Britain handed Hong Kong back to China. What would it
have meant if the histories of the relationship were spoken of openly?
2. A similar process has since occurred with 'crack cocaine' being derived
from cocaine.
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